The Weather Clear tomorrow; cold. continued t igant~ juatlwlj I Editorials The Sleeping Senate .. . I VOL. XLVII No. 57 ANN ARBOR, MIClIGAN, THURSDAY, DEC. 3, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Goodfellows Lay Plans League's Men Alone Protest Board Wages King MayAbdicate Today. And Leave Great Britain For 2nd Annual Camp 30 Cents An Hour, Taken Sale On M onday De .14 Out In Food, Is Average mwlw; l ell ay For Student Help Accompanied By Walie Campaign To Open Today In Union; Pres. Ruthven To Head Committee Honorary Groups Will Sell Papers Goodfellow Extra Helps Unfortunate Children, Needy Students The date for the second annual Michigan Daily Goodfellow Drive was set last night for Monday, Dec. 14. The campaign will be officially opened at 8 p.m. today in Rooms 321- 325 of the Union with the first meet- ing of the Executive Committee, to be headed by President Ruthven. Members of campus honorary so- cieties conducted a 10-hour street sale of Goodfellow Dailies last year to net almost $1,400, which was distrib- uted among needy students through the office of the dean of students, and among needy townspeople and chil- dren through the Family Welfare Bureau. Directed By Special Committee The Goodfellow Edition was orig- inally conceived to replace the num- ber of individual parties which stu- dent groups were giving for unfor- tunate children at Christmas, but its usefulness has been broadened to in- clude needy students. This year the campaign will be extended to include the downtown Ann Arbor area. The Goodfellow Drive this year will be under the direction of a special committee of the Men's Council, headed by George Sprau, '37A, and including Hubert Fones, '38E, and James Walker, '37E. Deans Alice C. J oyd and Joseph A. Bursley will serve this year as last as faculty advisers on the Executive Committee. George W. Cosper, '37, president of the Interfraternity Coun- cil, will be secretary of the committee. Other members of the committee will be: Miller G. Sherwood, '37, pres- ident of the Men's Council; Herbert Wolfe. '37, president of the Michigan Union; Charlotte Rueger, '37. pres- ident of the Michigan League; Betty Ann Beebe, '37, president of the Pan- Hellenic Association; Elsie A. Pierce '37, managing editor of The Daily; Hope Har'twig, '38, president of Wy- vern; Grace Snyder, '37, of Mortar- board; Mary Andrews, '37, president of Senior Society; Frank Dannemil- ler, '37, president of Michigamua; T. K. Fisher, '39L, president of Druids; Joseph S. Mattes, '38, president of Sphinx: Don Hillier, '37E, president of Vulcans; Hubert Fones; '37, presi- dent of Triangles; James Walker, '37E, president of the Engineering Council; Gustave Collatz, '37E. presi- dent of Tau Beta Pi; Leonard Kasle, '38, president of the Hillel Founda- tion; and Richard Clark, '37, presi- dent of the Student Christian Asso- ciation. Speakers' Group To Meet> Meeting at the same time will be a Speaker's Committee, which will include, in addition to the above: Frank Barnard, '37E and Jack Kas- ley. '37E, members of Michigamua; Betty King, '37, of the Panhellenic Association; Maryanna Chockley, '37, chairman of the League Judiciary Council; Lois M. King, '37, secretary of the League; Betty Whitney, '37, of Wyvern; and John Mann, '38, secre- tary of the Interfraternity Council. The meeting will be addressed by Mrs. Gordon W. Brevoort, executive secretary of the Family Welfare Bu- reau. Student Labor Will Consider Campus Wages Working conditions. in the Michi- gan League will be one point under discussion at .8:30 p.m. today when the Student , Workers Federation meets in the Union to review wages paid by campus eating places. Prof. John F. Shepard of the psychology department will talk on "The Values of Organization." Membership in the Student Work- ers Federation is 25 cents a semester, according to Tom Downs, '38, presi- v orKer-rimpioyer The. For A Trai The time has come for the1 abandon its hitherto anomalousp well as in deed that football is n a business as well. There are many who deplo game, and wish that we could r played football for the love of athletic prowess was a financial as the Stadium. But those halcyo University of Michigan is playi hides its head in the sand byr status of football. We respect and admire the o for clinging to the standards o Michigan completely free from w of professionalism. However, it university, no one athletic depar to the old system. These are the facts of the c total gate receipts from the run into enormous sums. Often new stadia. Always it is usedt carried on by the university. No "big brother" to basketball, swimr important, to intramural sports. On the shoulders of the eleven the gridiron rests a tremendous b tensive sport program which the drastically curtailed or even elimi teams of the past made possible t Therefore The Daily believe obligated to make some slight gest gesture should, we believe, be the at which members of the football meal every day throughout the se We advocate this plan becaus light, showingthat 10 members to their work on the team and t forced to work on the average meals. Some of them even lost ti when the team had to play out- fired because of injuries suffered forced to get together and cook In suggesting such a measure, sidization of the athletes in any fo igan has always been marked by methods, and we hope that thes perpetuated. We do not believe, however,t way be construed as subsidization who is under terrific pressure for given adequate and balanced mea ical attention throughout the sea Two objections have continua has been suggested. First, it is table for the football team woul in other sports. Why not, it is a ketball team, to the hockey team maintain, the football player isr sacrifice than team membersin as hours of practice may be just as physical exertion may be as great, team is under a strain which i player is "on the spot" every Sat more people. Football games ma and a player's actions are hashe ward. Can anyone deny that fo The second objection is based schools in the Western Conferen vantage because some schoolst training table. Why not, we say? At the most, figuring the expe weeks, the cost would not amoun versity represented in the Big T amount to insure decent meals fo Last of all, we wish to make it losing team. Even if MichiganI ship this year, we would still a athletes. Professor Moore Of Bell Music7 EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of a series of articles being run this week dealing with features of the Bur- ton Tower and Baird Carillon, which will be dedicated Friday. By ROBERT MITCHELL Depicting the growth of interest in carillons in America since the war as a sort of carillon renaissance, Prof. Earl V. Moore, director of the School of Music, yesterday related the his- tory of bell music through the ages and its importance and effects in They Involve An E Board Is Proposed ____ N eed Union, Wolverine Have T>r " Highest Standards, Daily filln4 Ja I Survey Indicates -- --A survey by The Daily, of student employment in Ann Arbor restau- University athletic department to iants, completed last night, estab- position and recognize in name as lishes that the average student em- o longer merely a sport-that it is ploe receives approximately 30 cents an hour, invariably paid in food ire the professionalization of the rather than in cash, and that stu- eturn to the old days when boys dent labor-excepting that of the the game, and not because their Mcia egei aife. set to the University in paying for Thomas C. Sullivan, '37, chairman n days are gone forever, and the of the Men's Council committee on. h of th h hich student labor, said last night that on ng the part ofthe ostrichwhic a basis of The Daily report he would refusing to recognize the present recommend the formation of a stu- dent labor-employer relations com- fficials of the athletic department mittee at its next meeting to the f by-gone days, and for keeping Council. hat they consider to be the stigma The labor relations committee, un- is a futile gesture, since no on- der Sullivan's plan, would consist of tment can accomplish a reversion Dean Joseph A. Bursley, one Student- Workers' Federation member, and an indefinite number of faculty mem- r ase. Football is a business. The bers and students. This Committee, nation's college football games Sullivan said, would investigate all the money is used to pay for huge complaints tendered, treating each to support other sport programs case individually. :.;<.; one can deny that football is the Receive 30 Cents Per Hour. ming, tennis, track, and, even more At the League, where the Student- Workers'. Federation is attempting r i men who represent Michigan on to raise the wage standard, the great Associated Press Photo urden. Without these men the ex- majority of student employes re- King Edward VIII, in his coronat University now offers would be ceives 30 cents an hour, and each is Simpson,H altirnore divorcee, are pi ated. Michigan's historic football required to take at least 75 cents of intent to marry Mrs. Simpson has his daily wage in food at the League he new stadium. cafeteria. In other words, the League into a crisis, the result of which ma s that the University should feel employe works 2%/2 hours daily for" ure to alleviate that burden. That two meals, both "special" menus F e o ri* establishment of a training table, which a number of League employes Freedo m F team would receive one blnceed have declared insufficient. For over- ason. time work, the League employe re- Basis For Ut( e of the facts recently brought to ceives 30 cents an hour in cash. A- of the Varsity squad, in addition few League employes are paid more- heir schedule of school work, are than 30 cents per hour. By ROBERT T. BALDWIN, Jr. of three hours a day for their In contrast, the Union probably Freedom from regimentation, a re- heir jobs because they were absent pays the highest wages to student ward greater than money, praise or Y employes of any Ann Arbor eating mr aifcin stebsso of-town games, while others were a1mrta i xcp ai mere satisfaction, is the basis of a Df-twn ains, hileothrs ere establishment with the exception of plan for the improvement of democ- in the games. Still others were the Wolverine, a cooperative eating ray te bPro f Stuart thei ow meas. stabishentracy suggested by Prof. Stuart A. their own meals. establishment. Courtis of the School of Education. The Daily is not advocating sub- The Union pays the majority of its An interview yesterday with Pro- rm whatsoever. Football at Mich- student employes 40 cents an hour, fessor Courtis concerning his editor- an unusual freedom from such and requires that 80 cents be taken standards of former years will be in food in the Tap. Room. For over- ial in the bulletin of the education time work, Union employesreiv school disclosed this novel idea. The receive editorial suggested teaching 'cooper- that a training table could in any 40 cents an hour in cash payment. ation' in the schools of America. thta tltWolverine Gives 29 Meals aini h col fAeia It simply means that an athlete, The olvie ays $4.5 n trade Professor Courtis hopes that by eight weeks of the year, should be for 15 hours work, which, according teaching this "science" the fierce Lis just as he is given proper med- to student testimony, allows for 20 competition .society engages in to son. . meals a week, fruit once or twice make a living today can be eliminat- lly been raised whenever this plan daily, meat once or twice daily and ed. In this way society can be great- said, maintenance of a training "seconds" on certain types of food. ly benefited, since manufacturers will d be unfair to teams participating The Daily survey shows a distinct no longer hold out on the public sked, give good meals to the bas- unfairness in the Student-Workers' with the improvements that they n, and all the rest? Because, we Federation report of last year. The have, he said. required to make a much heavier federation used the Wolverine rate For example, telegraph companies, Lny other sport. Granted that the of paying student labor as a base, intimated Professor Courtis, can give long in other sports and that the while the Wolverine, being a coop- the public much better service, but the fact remains that the football erative enterprise, dispensing with they withold these improvements s not paralleled anywhere. The profits, can afford to pay the em- pending any advance that a com- ploye more and has a lower retail petitor announces. He adds that the rday before a crowd of 50,000 or price range. But use of the Wolver- automobile industry could give to the ke headlines all over the country, ine as a base does not discredit the public a vehicle which could easily d and re-hashed for weeks after.- Federation findings of a wide dis- travel 40 miles on a gallon of gaso- otball is "King of Sports"? crepancy in student wages. line, but the oil industries have some- on the contention that wealthier Discrepancy Exists thing to say about that idea. ice would be given an unfair ad- The Daily survey, although the eat- In the beginning, everyone would could not afford to maintain a ing establishments included were in be regimented by the government, unison in paying three meals for under the system envisioned by Pro- nse at $1 a day per player for eight three hours' work, does not by any fessor Courtis, but when some mem- t to more than $1,600. What uni- means indicate that there is not a ber of society made an outstanding en could not afford to spend this wide discrepancy in Ann Arbor res- contribution to the welfare of the a their football players? taurant wage standards. This is group he would be given his free- clear that this s not an alibi for a true because of the wide range in dom. "It is obvious," asserts Profes- hadrwohat tehNtisonalhamiorn both the quality and the price of food sor Courtis," that the incentive to had won the National Champion- at various establishments. - - --- dvocate a training table for her The average student employe, in receiving payment of three meals for Two- ay rive three hours' work (at approximately Relates H istory cents an hour), is usually restrict- Of Galens Nets Rela es H stor edin his choice of food. The average employer, if the tes- Total $P 00 Throughout Ages timony of a few can be taken asota . holding true for the majority, pays his employes from 15 to 20 cents the town church or cathedral. The worth of food for an hour's labor. Approximately $1,300 was collect- The difference between his actual ed from the two-day tag sale con- carillonneur is a civic oticor, respect- food cost and 30 cents, the average ducted by Galens, honorary junior ed by the entire community. Almost hourly wage, is presumably charged and senior medical fraternity, accord- every town in Holland has a carillon, to overhead, probably on the theorytang tor me ilfrtn,'yacr- while Belgium has several that are that 30 cents would go no farther in ing to J. Robert Willson, '37M, presi- famous the world over." Longfellow another restaurant than in the one dent of Galens. is one of many poets who have writ- in which it was earned. All of the tags were sold, but the ten about the carillon at Bruges, amount of money is slightly below while the St Rombold Tower at Ma- I[_ 7 -that of last year when about $1,- mpire In A Crisis - Associated Press Photo 4 ion robes, and Mrs. Wallis Warfield ctured above. The king's rumored plunged the entire British Empire iy be Edward's abdication. egimentation mian Democracy gain one's freedom would drive one to greater deeds than those accom- plished under the profit motive." Thus with all units of human en-' deavor reduced to the position of striving for the good of society, Pro-1 fessor Courtis believes that money, the root of many economic ills, is1 discarded, and, he adds, the highest form of government, a democratic brotherhood, is achieved. The profit motive will disappear, he believes,1 and wi'th it, class hatred and all1 forms of exploitation. Professor Courtis can see in the1 actions and policies of President Roosevelt a tendency to attempt to (Continued on Page 61 Big. TenMeet To Hear Small Subsidy ]Plan Proposition To Be Given To Annual Meeting Of Conference Advisers By IRVIN LISAGOR A plan, proposing to give Big Ten athletes a modest subsidy, will be flung into the laps of Conference fac- ulty advisers and athletic directors at their annual meeting in Chicago on Friday. Conceived by a University of Wis- consin professor, Robert L. Reynolds, the plan is designed to do away with the oft-whispered insinuations and finger-pointing concerning subsidized football players and bring the dis- cussions fully into the open. The gist of the Reynolds Plan is contained in 'this brief 3-point pro- gram : 1. A free course of studies and sports would be provided for high school graduates who possess athletic ability and show some scholastic ap- titude in a summer school session of six weeks. 2. If their six-week grade, based upon their showing in studies and athletics, are worthy enough they swould be awarded a scholarship of $400 a year. These funds would be supplied by alumni and friends of the university. 3. In order to receive the scholar- ship for four years, these students have to maintain an academic aver- age of 1.5 points per credit ( a C+F average at Michigan) during their freshman and sophomore years. It New York Times States Possibility Of Edwar&o Forsaking Realm Dhke Of York Next In Line For Throne Prime Minister. Calls On King To Talk Situation Over With Him NEW YORK, Dec. 2.-(QP) -The New York Times, in a London dis- patch tonight, asserts that conflict between King Edward and his cab- inet has resulted in a crisis "involv- ing the, possible abdication of the king tomorrow." It also reports ru- mors that Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson would leave the country to- morrow and that the King might go with her. Anxious subjects of King Ed- ward VIII, pondering the fate of the crown should the strong-willed monarch abdicate over "The affaire Simpson," last night focused their attention on the heir presumptive, the slim and studious Duke of York. They saw in the second son of King George and Queen Mary the anti- thesis, in many respects, of the gay and individualistic Edward. King Edward, when Prince of Wales, once declared that "Bertie," as he calls the Duke, would make a better King than himself. LONDON, Dec. 2.-(A-The world's greatest empire reached a govern- ment crisis tonight because of Brit- ish King Edxlard's friendship for an American - born divorcee - Wallis Warfield Simpson. For an hour today Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin was closeted with the monarch in what was reported to have been a showdown on the King's friendship with Mrs. Simpson and re- ports that he hoped to marry her. Without mentioning the former Baltimore belle by name, the great Times of London appealed editorially to the monarch for "some authorita- tive act or statement" to "end once and for all" rumors of his intentions to marry Mrs. Simpson. Stern and silent, the Prime Min- ister strode into the palace for a straight-from-the-shoulder talk on the crisis which has grown to such proportions that some quarters as- sertedaldwin told Edward he and the cabinet would resign unless his majesty cooled his association with the former Baltimore belle. Confers With Simon He emerged at the end of the hour, went directly to the House of Com- mons and later to 10 Downing to confer with Sir John Simon, British Home Secretary. As the government crisis height- ened in intensity, it was learned from private sources that Edward himself is watching impending developments with unruffled composure, that above' everything else he will consider the best interests of the British realm and take no step likely to discredit the heritage cf the throne or violate the trust and loyalty of his people. Edward still will insist, these ad- vices said, upon his right as an in- dividual to seek personal happiness in his private life, but he is concerned by riticism now directed against him. Hopes For Solution The King hopes, with the sym- pathy of his people, it was stated, to work out a solution of his private actions which will be satisfactory to him and to the realm. As to reports he had made ar- rangements for marriage to Mrs. Simpson, those close to him asserted the monarch himself has branded the reports untrue. The news magazine Cavalcade', in an article for publication tomorrow, said Baldwin told Edward in a con- ference a week ago that he had re- ceived "representations" from Aus- ialia, Canada, and South Mrica on the King's friendship with Mrs. Simpson. "In this time of crisis when Britain must be strong and united," the Prime Minister was quoted as having lines is the subject of a poem by Henry Van Dyke about the last con-; cert on its bells before the Germans occupied the city during the war., Ghent and Antwerp also have fa- i Ti i} 1 i i AI ri-ar 1.1lr ocurments 400 was received. Fraternities and T e sororities gave $200 with several more! Shiown At Library ,still to contribute. "We are well-pleased with the re- The Josiah Harmar Papers, an in- sults," said Willson. "We will be valuabloe Petinn of lP.ttrC. armvIc hint-. -n - n,- i r, r m-i(et thel